Pollen, Mold, & Ragweed Count for the Titusville & Ewing

Ragweed pollen surged overnight! Mold spores increased and may provoke severe symptoms. Cladosporium is the predominant mold. Unusual Mold Alert Day #2: Aspergillus-Penicillium mold spores are unusually high. For those with asthma, nasal polyps and sinus disease, cystic fibrosis and other immune disorders, these unusual molds may present risk for serious reactions. Tree pollen is very low. Mold spores are very high. Ragweed is moderate. Grass is very low. Other weeds are moderate.

Trees

Grass

Ragweed

Other Weeds

Mold Spores

Predominant Allergen(s): Outdoor Mold Spores

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The Asthma Center is the region’s pollen count source

Certified by the National Allergy Bureau (NAB), The Asthma Center is the region’s only official source for today’s pollen, mold, and ragweed counts. We operate two official monitoring stations in the Delaware Valley, one in Center City, Philadelphia and the other in Mt. Laurel, New Jersey.

During the pollen season, The Asthma Center team collects, analyzes, and publishes the region’s official daily pollen count. We often share our research with local and national media (check out Dr. Don Dvorin on CBS below!), and use our expertise about local pollen conditions to understand the air you breathe so we can treat you better!

During the spring, summer, and fall, we post daily pollen counts to our website, the NAB website, and to our pollen count subscribers.